Richards ended the call. He went to the kitchen and looked in his fridge but there was nothing he wanted to eat. He called up a local Indian that did decent takeaways and an hour later he tucked into a chicken tikka masala and a lamb biryani. The food helped to get rid of his headache. He opened a bottle of Cristal and polished off half of it.
The more he drank the less he thought about Carolyn. He finished the bottle and watched football on Sky Sports until he fell asleep.
CHAPTER 61
Carolyn ran a hand through his hair and pulled him towards her, her mouth opening. Richards kissed her, his tongue slipping easily between her lips, and she moaned softly, grinding herself against him as she returned the kiss. He reached up and cupped her breast and she moaned again, louder this time. He felt her nipple stiffen and he caressed her breast, softly at first and then harder. He heard a buzzing sound but he ignored it and continued to kiss her, his lips pressed hard against hers.
He broke away, his heart pounding. ‘God, I’ve missed you,’ he said.
‘I’ve missed you too,’ she said.
‘I’ll never let you go again,’ he said. He could smell her perfume. Coco Mademoiselle. The buzzing was louder, more insistent.
‘You didn’t let me go, Warwick,’ she said, looking deep into her eyes. ‘You killed me, remember?’
The buzzer went again and Richards woke up. He was lying on the sofa and the television was still showing football. He wiped his face and sat up. The door entry phone buzzed again. He looked at his wristwatch. It was just before seven-thirty. He tried to work out if it was morning or evening. It was evening, he realised. He’d slept away most of the day.
He stood up and walked over to the entry phone, wondering why Halpin had turned up half an hour early. There were four buttons on the unit at street level but only the top one was connected. He reached for the handset but he froze when he saw the face on the monitor. A woman, her face soaking wet, her hair drenched, her eyes wide and staring. It was Carolyn.
CHAPTER 62
Richards raced down the stairs, figuring that would be quicker than the lumbering lift. He hadn’t picked up the handset, he’d just grabbed his keys and run out of the flat. His heart was pounding and it wasn’t from the physical exertion of running down the stairs. Carolyn? How could Carolyn be at his front door when she was in a trunk at the bottom of the North Sea?
He reached the second floor, grabbed the metal rail that ran the full length of the onside wall and swung himself around. There was a fire door at the very bottom of the stairwell that led into a small tiled lobby. The front door was to the left and he fumbled with the lock before yanking it open. It was pouring with rain and, as he stepped outside, there was a menacing roll of thunder off in the distance. The pavement was deserted. A black cab drove by with its yellow FOR HIRE light on.
He whirled around but there was no sign of her. A young couple sheltering under an umbrella walked by him. ‘He’s got no shoes on, did you see that?’ he heard the woman say in a strangled Essex accent. ‘What sort of idiot goes out at night in the rain without shoes?’
Richards looked across the road. The rain was blinding him and he put his hands up to shield his eyes. There was a man holding a newspaper over his head and a teenage girl with a Spaniel on a leash sheltering in a doorway. Richards did a slow three-sixty as the rain drenched him. There was no sign of her.
He ran his hands through his soaking wet hair, wondering if he was going crazy. Had he imagined it? Was it the booze? Or was his guilty conscience playing tricks on him? He turned and went back into the building.
CHAPTER 63
Richards changed out of his wet clothes and then showered again and put on a suit and tie. He was slipping on his shoes when the door entry phone buzzed again. He hurried over to the handset. It was Halpin. Richards said he’d be right down.
Halpin had parked his Lexus in the road and Richards climbed in. The wipers swished back and forth across the windscreen,
‘You okay boss?’ asked Halpin. ‘You look like shit.’
‘I didn’t sleep much,’ said Richards.
Halpin pulled away from the kerb and headed for West London.
‘Everything went okay, yesterday?’ asked Richards.
‘Sure.’
‘No problems at all?’
Halpin shook his head. ‘Took the boat out, dumped the chest in the water, headed back.’
‘And you saw it go into the water?’
‘Boss, I did it myself. Me and Sonny.’ He looked across at Richards. ‘Something wrong?’
‘Just want to make sure it was done right.’
‘It was, boss. As right as rain.’
Richards took his cigar case out of his jacket pocket and lit one. ‘Never thought I’d kill a woman,’ he said quietly.
‘It had to be done, boss,’ said Halpin. ‘You had no choice. If she’d grassed you up it’d be life behind bars. For you and for me. And she hired Dunbar. She wouldn’t have done that if she wasn’t on your case.’
‘Yeah, you’re right.’ He puffed on his cigar. ‘I just wish there’d been another way.’
‘You could have married her,’ said Halpin.
Richards looked over at him. ‘What?’
‘I’m just saying, wives can’t testify against their husbands. So if you’d married her…’ He shrugged. ‘Just saying.’
‘Yeah, well just don’t say,’ said Richards.
They drove in silence for a while. ‘How’s it going with the truck driver,’ asked Richards, eventually.
‘I’m on the case,’ said Halpin. ‘It’ll be easy enough. He sleeps in the cab when he’s away from home. I think I can get a look at his roster to see when he’s away and I could do him miles from London.’
‘You okay with that?’
‘Boss, my name’s in the frame for all of this. I’m covering my own arse.’
‘Then cover away, Mick.’
‘It’ll mean I’ll be away for a day or two.’
‘No sweat, I’ve nothing major coming up. I’ll be okay. I’ll let you know when it’s a good time.’
Richards took a long pull on his cigar. ‘You’re okay with the way it went down?’ he asked.
‘What do you mean?’
Richards shrugged. ‘Getting rid of her the way we did.’
‘We didn’t have a choice, boss. It was her or us. And I don’t know about you but I’m not going to do a twenty stretch for anyone. She brought it on herself by hiring Dunbar. If she’d just kept quiet she’d have been fine.’
Richards nodded. ‘Yeah,’ he said.
‘Look at this way, boss. That bastard, Cohen, was stealing from you and you did him without a second thought. She would have done you more damage than he did, no doubt about it. We did what had to be done. End of.’
‘You’re right,’ Richards said quietly.
‘Damn right I’m right,’ said Halpin.
Richards settled back in his seat and tried to get his head straight for when he met The Mint. The rain was heavier now and, even at full speed, the wipers were finding it hard to cope with the deluge.
They reached a set of red traffic lights and Halpin brought his Lexus to a halt. Richards stared through the windscreen with unseeing eyes, his mind on the money that he was getting ready to transfer to one of The Mint’s offshore accounts. The swish-swish of the wipers was almost hypnotic. There was a white Audi TT stopped at the lights on the other side of the junction. There was a woman at the wheel. Richards narrowed his eyes as he tried to focus. He took the cigar out of his mouth and leaned forward. ‘What the fuck…?’
‘What boss?’
The lights changed to green and the Audi leapt across the junction. Richards turned to watch the car speed by. ‘Turn the car around!’ he shouted.